Most Opera Today readers are probably familiar with Gian Carlo Menotti largely through his operas (The Medium, The Consul, Amahl and the Night Visitors, The Telephone, and others), and, if they teach or coach voice, may be more familiar than they’d like to be with pieces like “This is my box” and “Monica’s Waltz”, which have long been mainstays of the
“American aria” branch of repertoire for young singers.
Month: July 2006
MENOTTI : Concerto for Violin and Orchestra / Cantilena e Scherzo / Canti Della Lontanza / Five Songs
The Nose
http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,14936-2280131,00.html
Ingeniously staged, well-sung ëBarber of Seville’ at Glimmerglass
http://www.theithacajournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060720/ENTERTAINMENT03/607200306/1082
Previews: Betrothal in a Monastery, Glyndebourne, East Sussex
http://enjoyment.independent.co.uk/music/features/article1187667.ece
Salzburg r¸stet sich f¸r Rekord-Festspiele
http://www.merkur-online.de/nachrichten/kultur/kunstakt/art282,692188.html
Sovereign sound
http://www.timeout.com/newyork/Details.do?page=1&xyurl=xyl://TONYWebArticles1/564/music_classical/sovereign_sound.xml
‘The only star here is dead’
http://arts.guardian.co.uk/features/story/0,,1824738,00.html
Leyla Gencer in Concert
There are lieder-recitals and there are lieder-recitals. In my experience Lucia Popp, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau and Margaret Price stuck to their Lieder-guns till the last item, sometimes offering Strauss’ Zueignung as an encore.
BEETHOVEN: Missa Solemnis
This excellent performance of Beethoven’s mammoth sacred work, Missa Solemnis, served as part of the
celebration of the reopening (after reconstruction) of the Dresden Frauenkirche, which suffered devastating damage in the same bombing raid that destroyed much of the city and so many of its inhabitants near the end of WWII.
GUERRERO: Missa Surge Propera
The composers Morales, Guerrero, and Victoria form a holy trinity of sorts, dominating Spanish church music in what we have come to see as a “Golden Age,” a time in which sixteenth-century liturgical polyphony assumed a classical perfection.